Alfresco Addons *Incomplete list*

We are in the process of building a space for all Alfresco Addons. One massive list does not seem very useful. You'll be able to find all Addons here - Alfresco Addons. I hope to have all Addons listed by EOD Wed (June 20).

What is an add-on?

An Alfresco Add-on can improve the capabilities of an Alfresco product, but is not shipped with the product. Examples include:

Community maintained language packs,

Integrations with external systems,

Packaged customizations

System administration tools

How is this different from the Solutions Showcase?

The Solutions Showcase details solutions based on Alfresco that are produced by Certified Alfresco Partners. A solution solves a business problem by a leveraging a mixture of Alfresco configuration, Alfresco customization, a collection of add-ons, and consulting services. Solutions also often include a training and support component.

What editions, products, and versions of Alfresco are included in the directory?

There are add-ons in the directory for all Alfresco editions, including Community Edition, Enterprise Edition, and Alfresco in the cloud. There are add-ons for every product of Alfresco, including Share, Records Management, Web QuickStart, and the mobile applications. Developer tools are also included. The directory includes add-ons which are intended to be used with version 3.4 of Alfresco and newer.

Is this add-on updated for the newest version of Alfresco?

We do not maintain add-ons or the directory entries. We suggest you contact the add-on maintainer. Each entry contains a link that points to a site where you can get further information about the add-on. We suggest you also encourage the add-on maintainer to update the directory entry.

If you are unable to contact the maintainer of the add-on, or if you see something that needs immediate attention, please contact us.

Are the add-ons supported?

Unless otherwise indicated, Add-ons are not endorsed or supported by Alfresco.

Each add-on maintainer can specify a web address where people can get information about support for the add-on. If there is no such link, then it is likely that support is not available. Further information might be available on the project page for that add-on.

Does the directory only contain open source add-ons?

The directory contains add-ons under a variety of licenses. The submitter of the add-on can select the license that the project is using, including the option ""proprietary"".

What license to you recommend for an add-on?

The appropriate license for your add-on depends a lot on the goals you and your organization have in sponsoring an Alfresco Add-ons project. Evaluating the right choice for your specific circumstances probably requires the assistance of a legal professional. However, we like licenses approved by the Open Source Initiative because they encourage collaborative development. If you hope to have your Add-on accepted into Alfresco, you would need to select the Apache license, or sign a contribution agreement.

Someone else included my add-on in the directory. How do I update the entry?

We hope you feel flattered that someone found your add-on useful enough to include it in the directory. If you sign up for a site-account and then contact us, we will be happy to make you the maintainer of the entry.

I see a problem! How do I contact you?

Please contact us about a duplicate add-on or objectionable content. You can reach us by sending email to the Alfresco Community Team.

This project defines three custom dashlets to display a slideshow display of photostreams sourced from Flickr's public API. The dashlets are able to display public photos from three types of feed. <ul> <li>User photos</li> <li>User contacts photos</li> <li>User favourite photos</li> </ul> This is part of the Share-Extras project.

This add-on provides a modified page footer component, which integrates a client-side module to provide page tracking using Google Analytics. Tracking can be enabled on a per-site basis by adding the supplied Trackable Container aspect to the site folder, using the Repository Browser. The Tracking Enabled property supplied by the aspect must be set to true, and the Tracking UID property should be set to the value of your Google Analytics site ID, i.e. UA-xxxxxx-x. Alternatively, global tracking of Share usage can be enabled by setting <global>true</global> in the supplied configuration file org/alfresco/components/tracking/footer.get.config.xml. The add-on should work with Alfresco version 3.3 and upwards. This is part of the Share-Extras project.

This project implements a number of customizations to the Alfresco Share wiki component to improve it's visual appearance, and add support for dynamic tables of contents, embedded document previews, inline data lists/tables and syntax-highlighted code using Google Code Prettify. This is part of the Share-Extras project.

This project defines a Share administration console component to execute custom javascript code against the Alfresco repository. It can be used for prototyping webscripts or to run administrative scripts. This is part of the Share-Extras project.

This project defines three custom dashlets which you can use to interact with Twitter from within Alfresco Share. The Twitter Feed dashlet displays recent Tweets from any public Twitter user, or any public list belonging to a user.

A collection of Python scripts which can be used to import and export sites and users from Alfresco Share. The package is intended to help set up demonstration environments quickly, reliably and consistently. The scripts are not suitable for importing or exporting large volumes of content or for any general production use such as system backups.

The Tag Query dashlet was developed for the 2011 Alfresco dashlet challenge by Jan Pfitzner and is part of <a href="http://alfresco.fme.de/Overview.925.0.html">fme's extensions gallery</a>. The dashlet displays a list of documents and folders that are tagged with a configurable tag. Following features are implemented: <ul> <li>display a thumbnail of the documents on mouse-over.</li> <li>display the favorite status & allows the user to mark/unmark a document as favorite</li> <li>list uses paging with a configurable page size</li> <li>end user friendly configuration dialog (only accessible for SiteManagers) </li> <li>also list folders with the given tag</li> </ul> Screencam: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtzGvTRXt24 For more information and updates follow @fme_alfresco on Twitter or visit our Google+ page: https://twitter.com/#!/fme_alfrescohttps://plus.google.com/113188782603492544202 For all of our other Alfresco extensions vist: http://alfresco.fme.de/

This project defines a top x documents dashlet for the Alfresco Dashlet Challenge 2011. The dashlet displays the most downloaded documents in the repository by using a custom aspect "topx:countable". Only documents with a hitcounter bigger than 3 are displayed in the list. Features The dashlet shows the documents with the biggest hitcount (property of custom aspect). Following features are implemented: <ul> <li>display thumbnail of the documents with hover effect and hit image in it.</li> <li>download the document directly with tooltip (content size and mimetype)</li> <li>jump to the parent folder of the document with tooltip (display path of the folder)</li> <li>jump to the document details of the documents</li> <li>displays the hitcount, creation/modify date and creator /modifier of the document </li> </ul> Caveeats: <ul> <li>Maxitems is fix at the moment (no configuration provided) </li> </ul>

The Gallery Plus dashlet was developed for the 2011 Alfresco dashlet challenge by Florian Maul and is part of <a href="http://alfresco.fme.de/Overview.925.0.html">fme's extensions gallery</a>. It is an image gallery dashlet that features a thumbnail view, an albums view and an popup dialog with an image preview. Features: The thumbnail view <ul> <li>Self-aligning grid that neatly aligns images of all dimensions</li> <li>Images reflow when the window is resized and support dashlets of any size.</li> <li>Automatic reloading while scrolling</li> <li>Number of comments displayed in a small badge</li> <li>Two different sizes of thumbnails (120px height and 200px height)</li> <li>Images can be filtered by path or tags</li> <li>Images can be sorted by an arbitrary property</li> <li>Fade in/out animations to make things look smoother</li> </ul> The album view: <ul> <li>Gives an overview over all album (aspect) folders in the repository</li> <li>Displays albums with an image stack effect</li> <li>Albums can be filtered by folder path</li> </ul> Screencam: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtzGvTRXt24 For more information and updates follow @fme_alfresco on Twitter or visit our Google+ page: https://twitter.com/#!/fme_alfrescohttps://plus.google.com/113188782603492544202 For all of our other Alfresco extensions visit: http://alfresco.fme.de/

Activity Stats - a reporting tool for Alfresco Share. It helps the administrator to monitor the users connections and activities. It provides for all users a graphical overview of what happened in their sites. Contact www.alfea-consulting.be for support.

The Confluence Alfresco Integration Rivet (CAIr) integrates Atlassian Confluence Enterprise Wiki with Alfresco Enterprise Content Management. Our aim is to create a base of infrastructure upon which further Alfresco / Confluence integration and plugins can be built.

A collection of tools for integration and information exchange between Atlassian Confluence and Alfresco, and possibily other CMSes. The current Alfresco Plugin for Confluence provides a set of custom macros that enable Confluence wiki pages to display or embed Alfresco documents or document metadata through ID reference, Path reference or CMIS Search Query. The expectation is that we can provide a seamless experience to users of both platforms: <ul> <li>Search integration within Alfresco: By adding OpenSearch capabilities to Confluence, Alfresco is now able to aggregate search results from Confluence wiki pages and the Alfresco repository. So, for example, a user logged into Alfresco will be able to retrieve data from documents hosted in an Alfresco repository and any Confluence page she's got access to. This is a good example of what open standards and extensible systems can offer. </li> <li>New macros for Confluence, providing wiki users with the ability to interact with an Alfresco repository in a number of ways, such as: <ul> <li>Browse an Alfresco repository</li> <li>Reference (link) and embed (display directly) documents stored in Alfresco</li> <li>Build custom reports (such as listing documents that match specified criteria) by running queries against the Alfresco repositories</li></ul></li> <li>Use Web Scripts or CMIS: As an added bonus, macros are implemented using either Alfresco-specific technologies such as Web Scripts or a pure standard-based approach (CMIS). The Web Scripts technology is very, very cool and opens the door to do some interesting new capabilities for Confluence.</li> </ul>

The site dashlet provides statistical information about No. Of Documents, wiki, blogs, forums for a specific site for either all users or a particular user in graphical view. In addition to that, there is User dashlet, which will display information about active workflows and completed workflows for any user. The records can show for a current year, any year or range of years.

This module provides a high performance bulk import mechanism for files, folders, metadata and version histories. By default it imports content from the Alfresco server's filesystem, and as of v2.0 the tool also supports "pluggable sources". This allows other systems / repositories / data stores to be used as a source for imports, instead of the Alfresco server's filesystem. The tool has been in production use continuously since 2008, across an estimated 1000 installations of Alfresco. Ingestion rates as high as ~650 documents / second have been measured with v1.x of the tool, and v2.0+ is expected to provide substantial speedups over the previous version. A recent <a href="http://www.ziaconsulting.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/baldwinandlyons-case-study-web.pdf">case study from Zia</a> (one of Alfresco's consulting partners) describes a successful migration project that leveraged the tool.

XMP is Adobe's Extensible Metadata Platform (XMP). This project provides extensions which allow for XMP metadata manipulation, consisting of an extactor and embedder which can be configured to extract virtually any XMP metadata into virtually any Alfresco property including custom metadata into custom properties.

The CMIS API package of modules primarily provides an API for connecting to CMIS compliant systems to bi-directionally synchronize content between the CMIS ECM system and Drupal. In addition to the API, this package provides a range of basic functionality for creating, updating, browsing and searching content in the CMIS ECM system via the Drupal interface. The overall goal of the modules is to provide an easy-to-use, WCM front-end in Drupal for ECM systems that are often unfamiliar to web content managers. While this module does provide interfaces and functionality out of the box, most developers doing advanced integrations will want to create custom modules that invoke the included API for custom authentication, sync, content type extension, etc.

The CMIS Views project aims to build on the Drupal CMIS API by allowing Drupal admins to save a view to a CMIS repository and display it in a Drupal block. Features: * Create view via query * Create view via file path * Choose a bullet or paragraphed theme for each view

Alfresco Share is a team- and project-based collaboration client that sits on top of the Alfresco repository. The goal of this project is to provide a microblogging component that can run within Alfresco Share and any other web application built with Alfresco Surf. This component installs easily as an Alfresco AMP for the repository tier and a ZIP for the Share/Surf tier. See the introduction for more details. Note that as of 3.4 Community, Alfresco added their own status component to the Share user interface. It's not as cool as this one but you may want to take a look before you decide which one to use.

The PHP SDK provides the following capabilities: <ul> <li>A PHP library that allows remote access to the Alfresco repository via the Alfresco PHP API</li> <li>Integrations for popular PHP applications. At the moment only MediaWiki is available.</li> <li>PHP templating and scripting capabilities in the repository using the Alfresco PHP API</li> <li>Support for running PHP applications in the repository JVM, with access to the Alfresco PHP API </li> </ul>

This add-on project for Alfresco Share defines a simple dashlet to display current weather observations and a three day forecast for over 9,000 locations across the world. Data is sourced from the BBC Weather RSS feeds.

This add-on project for Alfresco Share defines a simple dashlet to display a user-defined piece of content on a user or a site dashboard. It was inspired in part by the JotPad dashlet in SugarCRM. This dashlet is part of Share with the 4.2 release.

This dashlets takes the Site name as input, and performs a Google search, limiting the search to what has been indexed the last 5 days. Search terms and number of days are configurable. It does NOT show an index of your internal content. The use case is a Marketing manager creating a product launch site. To able to monitor what is said about your company or your product, the marketing manager ads a dashlet that lists all that has recently been indexed by Google. This is why the dashlet was named Google Site News, but your usage may very well be for just displaying what Google has recently index for a selected search term.

This project defines a custom dashlet to display events for a given audit application. The dashlet will need to have auditing application(s) already configured, and, to be useful, some events captured.

This add-on project for Alfresco Share defines a custom Document Library action which can be configured into the Document Library component of Alfresco Share, for use by site members. The custom action creates a copy of content in a "Backup" folder.

This add-on project for Alfresco Share defines a custom Document Library action allowing users to select a JavaScript file from the Data Dictionary to run against a file, which can be configured into the Document Library component of Alfresco Share.

This project provides an additional page component for the Document Details page to display a small map view for geotagged content items. This is different than the Geotag Dashlet. In this case, the small map shows for a specific document's document details page whereas the Geotag Dashlet shows all geotagged content within a Share site.

This add-on provides a Share administration console component to bulk-create repository users. Although similar to the capability provided in the Users console enhancements currently in development, this component offers a dedicated user interface with many options for customising the way in which users are created. Specifically the add-on provides support for: <ul> <li>Either JSON or CSV input data</li> <li>Customising which mandatory and optional fields are provided, plus the order of fields in the case of CSV data</li> <li>Automatic username and password generation, based on configurable policies</li> <li>Flexible logging of a report of all accounts created</li> <li>Template-based e-mail notifications to users containing their account credentials</li> </ul>

This is an addon to Share forms that lets you use the CKEditor as a wysiwyg editor for online edits. CKEditor, http://ckeditor.com/, is a separately developed tool, this addon provides the integration to Alfresco forms. CKEditor is GPL, LGPL MPL Triple copy left licensed.

This add-on provides a custom Spring Surf connector and client-side helper class, allowing easy OAuth-based access to external resources. It is a prerequisite for the Twitter, Yammer and LinkedIn dashlets provided by Share Extras. It could also be used by others who need to develop Share add-ons that require coordinating third-party authentication with OAuth.

Apache Chemistry OpenCMIS is a Java implementation of the Content Management Interoperability (CMIS) specification. It contains a server-side API, a client-side API, and a compatibility test kit. If you are writing Java applications against CMIS-compliant repositories (like Alfresco), you need to take a look at OpenCMIS.

Apache Chemistry PHP Client is a client-side API for PHP applications that need to work with CMIS-compliant repositories (like Alfresco). If you want to hit Alfresco remotely from PHP, you need to take a look at the Apache Chemistry PHP API.

Apache Chemistry cmislib is a CMIS client library for Python. The goal of this library is to provide an interoperable API to CMIS repositories such as Alfresco, Nuxeo, KnowledgeTree, MS SharePoint, EMC Documentum, and any other content repository that is CMIS-compliant.

DeckShare is used by anyone who has an Alfresco repository containing presentations or other documents that they want to categorize, associate with other presentations, and then make available to their user base. End-users can find presentations by searching metadata or presentation content, by navigating a hierarchical category structure, or by browsing "featured" or "latest" presentations. Presentations can be downloaded or viewed within the browser using Alfresco's flash previewer. People who manage presentations use Alfresco Share to upload and categorize presentations. Alternatively, content managers can use Alfresco's CIFS support to map a share to the repository and move presentations into the repo using drag-and-drop. Alfresco also supports WebDAV, FTP, SMTP, IMAP, and SharePoint's file sharing protocol for getting files into and out of the repository using whatever client makes the most sense. As presentations are uploaded, Alfresco automatically creates thumbnails of various sizes, PDF renditions of the content, and a Flash-based preview.

The goal of this project is to provide a microblogging component that can run within Alfresco Share and any other web application built with Alfresco Surf. Share users type their status into a dashlet. The status update is shown in another dashlet which aggregates status entries from across the enterprise. Status updates also show up in the activity feed. This component installs easily as an Alfresco AMP for the repository tier and a ZIP for the Share/Surf tier.

Leverage the power and functionality of a robust rich content store (Alfresco) with agility and rapid application development on the front-end presentation tier powered by Django. This was originally built for an Optaros client as a way to implement an Enterprise portal. Content is tagged, secured, and routed for approval in Alfresco. Django is used to build the front-end web site. Django requests (and caches) content objects from Alfresco via RESTful calls over HTTP. Authentication is handled by making Alfresco the authority--if a user can successfully log in to Alfresco, they can automatically log in to the Django-powered site. Django requests an Alfresco ticket and keeps it with the Django user object, renewing it when needed.

Multi-platform / Cross-Platform Desktop (AIR and Flex in browser) and Mobile AIR / Touch (Android tablets, iOS iPad) open source RIA Clients for Alfresco. <!--break--> <ul><li>FlexSpaces Desktop AIR version with desktop multi-select drag/drop copy in/out and native desktop clipboard copy/paste in/out support (runs on Windows and Mac)</li> <li>FlexSpaces "Flex In Browser" version </li> <li>FlexSpaces portlets for Liferay, JBoss, GateIn</li> <li>FlexSpaces Mobile version (geared for Android tablets and Apple iOS iPad, will fit on high res Android smartphones and iPhones)</li> </ul> All of these clients are based on the same Flex / ActionScript open source code base. In addition, customized versions of these clients or custom apps using FlexSpaces application components / APIs can be developed. Note that <a href="https://addons.alfresco.com/addons/cmis-spaces">CMIS Spaces</a>, is also based on the FlexSpaces code base. Custom apps could target CMIS-compliant repositories in general, if Alfresco specific features like workflow in FlexSpaces aren't involved. <p> FlexSpaces also has optional support for semantic tag clouds, auto-tagging, tag suggestion, geo-tagged semantic tags on a Google map. To use these features, the <a href="https://addons.alfresco.com/addons/opencalais-integration">OpenCalais Integration</a>, needs to be installed in your Alfresco server. </p> Developed by Integrated Semantics (the FlexSpaces Google Code project has locale *.properties files from Community members who translated the English version of FlexSpaces to Spanish, German, French, Japanese, and Greek) Note that FlexSpaces needs its custom web scripts installed in your Alfresco server. <a href="http://code.google.com/p/flexspaces/">FlexSpaces Google Code Project</a> blog: www.integratedsemantics.org www.integratedsemantics.com

This Alfresco module provided a <strong>complete designer</strong> to create new <strong>types</strong>, <strong>aspects</strong> and <strong>forms</strong> directly from the Alfresco Share interface. The interface is <strong>simple</strong> and <strong>intuitive</strong>. Finally, it enables to create, test and publish templates and forms directly into Alfresco without having to edit XML files, taking into account <strong>hot changes</strong>. Use drag and drop and creation wizards help accelerate models development. Look a the presentation video <a href="http://youtu.be/EKd-PM_0qHc">here</a> or follow install instruction on our <a href="https://www.becpg.fr/redmine/projects/becpg-community/wiki">wiki</a> page. If you like to stay tuned about Alfresco extensions made by beCPG then follow us on <a href="https://twitter.com/#!/beCPG">twitter</a>.

Alfresco Node Manager is an Open Source Java application that helps you to manage Alfresco Nodes. If you need to delete or update those nodes that are garbage in your system, this is the easier way to manage and clean your repository, if you are not a developer of course (or not!).

Business Reporting should be handled by the Business. Therefore reporting should use an existing tool and plain and simple SQL. Currently, reporting in Alfresco is not that easy, and many alternatives are tech-driven. This project allows the business to use their reporting suite of choice against 'plain tables' containing your Alfresco business objects. As a 'proof', Pentaho Reporting and JasperSoft (iReport) reports are supported to generate reports, on a regular automated manner (if you like). But feel free to use any BusinessObjects, Cognos, Clickview. This project is build on 2 parts. 1. Generate a reporting database based on business entities like Document, Case, Folder, Site etc. Each of these entities should contain all possible attribute values (even with Alfresco's Aspect feature providing flexible, runtime extensions) This reporting database can be filled from scratch, or incrementally since last update. Any Lucene query can define the content of the tables. (Think Aspects, Types, property values.) 2. Given a reporting database, report execution can be scheduled (thing hourly, daily, weekly, monthly). The result can be a pdf or xls files that will be stored in the Alfresco repository. Reports can have the scope of a Site only (or a user, or another container-like concept), executed against that site, and stored within that site. Currently Pentaho reporting is the supported reporting engine.

The purpose of this project is add the scan/capture functionality to Alfresco, by scan/capturing Images through Scanners, Cameras and videos using video capture unit. The tool is build based on this article http://tinyurl.com/cgc984(Thank you)

The purpose of the utility to import bulk documents into Alfresco with their meta data based on a custom content model and convert them to ACP file then import it into Alfresco. It reads custom content model, documents and CSV file and create ACP file.

This utility will help you to build custom content model, it only build the custom content model xml file, and the admin must modify manually the rest two files you can specify if the field is required, default or multi-values list

With the ifresco client we offer a powerful OpenSource Web-Client for Alfresco which has all features which are important and neccessary for the daily work with the DMS/ECM system and which can be operated easily and intuitiv. ifresco is Web-browser based - but offers consumer-like experience of MS-Windows applications with sortable lists, context menus, drag and drop. A plug-in interface allows to add new functions and features to the client without changing the base product. ifresco architecture: <ul> <li>PHP5+</li> <li>Symfony 1.4 for MVC Framework</li> <li>Doctrine for database ORM</li> <li> Alfresco Integration based on Standard Restful Services & Webservice API</li> <li>No additional webscripts must be installed on the server!</li> <li>Server Side Converter for OFFICE2SWF Conversion (jodconvert & swftools)</li> <li>MySQL to save - administrative data, user sessions and favorites</li> <li>jQuery for various JavaScript? functions and drag & drop</li> <li>ExtJS for the user interface with plug-ins</li> </ul>

Release Name: Alfresco Image Wall Release 0.1 (23-12-2008) Note: This is a project based on an old Alfresco release and old Cool Iris versions. So it needs quite some fixing to work on the latest releases. Browse Alfresco Images in a dashlet that uses CoolIris as viewer. CoolIria has changed quite a bit since 2008. This image wall needs to be modified to support the plugin: http://www.cooliris.com/desktop/install/

Pojonode makes the development of Alfresco repository services easier by replacing the paradigm: <code> String name = (String) nodeService.getProperty(nodeRef, ContentModel.PROP_NAME); </code> with the more conventional and OOP-centric approach: myContentNode.getName(); Pojonode is designed to be as non-intrusive as possible. While it can be used to drive an Alfresco content model definition, it can also be used as a simple add-in on top of an existing Alfresco environment, strictly for wiring/development simplicity. The SVN repository also contains a working demo located under http://pojonode.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/src/demo/, exemplifying the basic usage of the Pojonode services and annotations and how are they wired in an Alfresco environment. Please check the Building wiki page for details on how to build and use the demo.

Alfresco cmislib Extension

Alfresco in the Cloud: Enterprise Network,Alfresco in the Cloud: Free Network,Alfresco in the Cloud: Standard Network,Community 3.4.x,Community 4.0.x,Enterprise 3.4.x,Enterprise 4.0.x

Aspects are an essential tool to model metadata in Alfresco. The CMIS specification does not define aspects or something similar, but it defines several extension points. Alfresco uses these extensions point to send aspect data back and forth between a CMIS client and the server. CMIS extensions are XML fragments placed in different parts of a CMIS object. The Alfresco aspect fragments are documented on the Alfresco Wiki. So, theoretically, they are available to all CMIS clients out there including cmislib. In reality, dealing with CMIS extensions isn't fun and can require quite a lot of code. cmislib does all the XML parsing for you but, since it doesn't know anything about aspects, it can't provide pretty interfaces. That's where the "Alfresco cmislib Extension" steps in. It seamlessly merges aspect properties with object properties and provides interfaces to get, add and remove aspects.

Fancy working with Alfresco ECM or contributing to it, but don't want to waste way too much time in googling ? Then, you are in the right place. Just embrace maven Alfresco still bases its customizations on custom Ant builds and a hardly manageable and extensible SDK. This consideration makes it definitely not of easy penetration in two very important contexts like: * Enterprise processes: being ECM Alfresco should ship enterprise process level lifecycle management for its modules, with features like dependency management, properties filtering, documentation, release, centralized lib version management, etc. Managing Alfresco custom modules with Maven will provide all the mentioned benefits. * open source mainstream community (e.g. Apache) : due to the convention over configuration based approach to customization, developing an extension too often ends up in infinite unstructured wiki/forum documentation lookup. Using maven archetypes and embedded Jetty appserver run you could have an Alfresco application running with just 2 command lines standard commands. The usage of Maven Alfresco archetypes can solve both this issues and bring back Alfresco development to what it should be, i.e. FUN!

Hi Slava - Definitely not the complete list! I have about 200 more to add. I'm debating setting up a separate page for all the addons though - as this doc isn't going to be great for finding what you need. I'll make a decision today and start building early next week (or continue adding).

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